By the time the first Faraday Future rolls off the assembly line at the company’s 3 million-square-foot automobile plant at North Las Vegas’ Apex Industrial Park in late 2017, a large portion of the company’s 4,500 employees will be furnishing their new homes, buying groceries and living the Southern Nevada lifestyle.
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When state lawmakers convene later this month to consider an incentive package for Faraday Future, they won’t be asked to find $150 million for a water pipeline to the factory site.
Getting new neighbors can be a strange ordeal, filled with wracked nerves and awkward introductions. But for Kevin Chupp, general manager for the Love’s Travel Stop at Apex, the Thursday announcement of a gargantuan-sized neighbor across U.S. Highway 93 means one thing: Money.
Faraday Future isn’t the first company to enter the electric car fray, but it’s definitely the most enigmatic.